This is a list of fictional characters from DC Comics who are or have been enemies of Green Lantern.
Villain | First appearance | Description |
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Vandal Savage | Green Lantern #10 (winter 1943/44) | Vandar Adg, an immortal Cro-Magnon altered by the rays of a fallen meteor, possibly in 50,000 B.C. Vandal Savage has manipulated human history behind the scenes for centuries, being a Pharaoh, helping to murder Caesar (though Pre-Crisis he was Caesar), committing murders as Jack the Ripper, and has been an enemy of Alan Scott, the Justice Society, the Justice League, the Secret Six, and many others. His main opponent was another caveman exposed to it, the Immortal Man, until his destruction. |
Gambler | Green Lantern #12 (summer 1944) | Steven Sharpe III, a gentleman thief, master of disguise, and expert knife-thrower who battled the Golden Age Green Lantern after feeling his life was against him, and his girlfriend left him. He was a founding member of the Injustice Society of the World and captured Atom. Sharpe committed suicide after losing all his money to a corrupt casino. He was succeeded as the Gambler by his grandson, Steven Sharpe V. |
Sky Pirate | Green Lantern #27 | The Sky Pirate first appeared in the skies over Gotham City in the summer of 1947. Nothing is known of his origins or how he had amassed the financing for the expensive equipment he used in his early crimes. His first public crime was recorded when his airship, The Flying Dutchman, anchored alongside the penthouse apartment of a Gotham aristocrat. Casting a nearly invisible net lined with grappling hooks to the side of the building, the Sky Pirate manufactured the illusion of running across the air itself. With accomplices is pirate attire, the Sky Pirate robbed the wealthy guest at the penthouse party of cash and jewelry. Meanwhile, Alan Scott and Doiby Dickles observed the odd ship and quickly investigated. Quickly intervening, Doiby engaged the Pirate's thugs while the Green Lantern pursued the Sky Pirate himself. After some initial skirmish, the Pirate lured Green Lantern onto his netting and shot him with a flintlock pistol. Expecting a ball of lead, Green Lantern was caught off guard by the knockout gas coming out of the barrel. In the meantime, the Pirate's henchman had subdued Doiby and the ship was off with its booty. er than kill the hero and his sidekick out right, the Sky Pirate lashed them to the hands of a Gotham clock tower just before noon. As the clock hands moved closer together, the heroes were in danger of being crushed against each other until Green Lantern used his ring to jam the mechanism driving the clock and then free himself. While the heroes resolved their plight, the Sky Pirate had made a target of renowned miser, J. B. Jasper. The miserly millionaire lived in a penthouse in downtown Gotham and made a tempting target for the airborne criminal. Playing to the miser's well-known love of money, the Sky Pirate dropped a large back of money into the penthouse rose garden. When Jasper grabbed the bag, he was hooked and hauled up to The Flying Dutchman like a fish. Once on board, the courtly pirate offered the millionaire's release for the simple task of signing over his fortune. When the millionaire refused, the Pirate threatened to kill him. As he was about to force the elderly miser to his death, Green Lantern appeared off the side of the ship. Rather than be caught, the Sky Pirate pushed Jasper overboard. Rather than let the miser die, Green Lantern was forced to let the Sky Pirate escape. The Flying Dutchman immediately became engulfed in clouds and seemingly disappeared. After rescuing Jasper, however, Green Lantern noticed a cloud moving against the wind and followed it to a high peak. Hidden in the clouds, he found the Sky Pirate's hideaway, a natural cave high in the mountains of the Catskills. As Doiby engaged the thugs once more, Green Lantern pursued the Sky Pirate onto an elevator. As the two grappled, the Pirate got stronger and stronger as the elevator rose higher and higher. Hitting on the idea, the Green Lantern jammed the elevator controls into the down position, rocketing the elevator into the depths of the mountain. As they descended, the Sky Pirate weakened and panicked, become more and more withdrawn as they sank lower and lower. The Sky Pirate, as it was later learned, had terraphobia, a fear of being grounded. His fear had driven him to a life of crime high above the lands. After his collapse, the Sky Pirate was turned over to the authorities for his subsequent arraignment (Green Lantern #27). The Sky Pirate was not long for prison and soon escaped and re-assembled his gang. After learning the outcome of a fateful expedition in the Himalayas, the villain hit on an idea to rid himself of the primary obstacle to his plans. Disguising himself as the psychiatrist Dr. Ticky, the Pirate convinced the Green Lantern that recent difficulties in maintaining altitude were psychological in nature, a result of altaphobia or fear of heights. In truth, the Sky Pirate had generated a machine that caused massive downdrafts that interrupted Green Lantern's flight in several cases. With his nemesis afraid to leave the ground, the Sky Pirate took up pursuit of explorer Arthur Paxton. Paxton and explorer Ned Barnes had discovered a rare metal, an antigravity metal, in the rocks high on Mount Everest. As Paxton explained this to Barnes daughter (Barnes had died on the expedition), the Sky Pirate made an entrance and after a brief skirmish with the Green Lantern, kidnapped the explorer. As the Sky Pirate made for Mount Everest, Doiby Dickles found a note from Paxton revealing a hideout for the Pirate's gang on the 68th floor of the Gotham Building. There the heroes discovered the Sky Pirate downdraft machine and recognizing that Green Lantern's "altaphobia" was merely a hoax, took off in hot pursuit of the villain. When the hero arrived, the Sky Pirate was quickly mining the rocks for the novel metal. When his excavations were interrupted by the arrival of Green Lantern, Betty and Doiby Dickles, the Pirate and his men turned their attention to the interlopers. Handicapped by his civilian tagalong, Green Lantern was overcome and the trio tied to a large piece of anti-gravity metal. As they rose out of sight, the Sky Pirate finished off his operation and set sail. Struggling against the dwindling oxygen, Green Lantern set everyone free and the trio returned to Gotham. Quickly barging into the Gotham Building, the hero found the Sky Pirate and gang counting his loot. The overconfident criminal had assumed the hero dead and returned to his comfortable suite. Caught off guard, the criminals were no match for Green Lantern and quickly rounded up. The Sky Pirate was again turned over to the authorities (Comic Cavalcade #25). At some point, either between or after the two recorded cases, the Sky Pirate was pulled into the timestream by Per Degaton to help his battle against the All-Star Squadron in 1942. Following Degaton's defeat, his accomplices were returned to their proper times and likely had no recollection of their involvement in the case (Justice League of America #193, All-Star Squadron #1-3). As of this writing, the ultimate fate of the Sky Pirate remains a mystery. |
Knodar | Knodar comes from the year A.D. 2447 on the parallel Earth-2. Everyone's needs and whims are met by machines so that there is no incentive to steal, therefore no reason to create crime or criminals. The one person who liked this idea of being a criminal was Knodar. He was inspired from old gangster movies. In his initial try at being a criminal he was caught and placed in a cell for all to see as a social anomaly. His uniform was custom, since no uniforms needed to be mass-produced, with P's stitched on the uniform to stand for prisoner. He escaped to 1947 and began a crime spree with stolen tech from his time period. He was pursued by a man named Dalmyr and took him back to his time period when Alan Scott defeated him. He would later make two more trips to the 1940s only to be sent back by Alan Scott. He showed up again during the "Crisis on Infinite Earths" and battled Jonni Thunder and the Star Spangled Kid. It is believed he was not the last criminal from that time period, since the Reverse Flash hails from that time period. It is also unknown how his history has altered with the new Crisis creating a new Earth. He was seen at the House, Roulette's club for criminals. | |
Solomon Grundy | All-American Comics #61 (October 1944) | Formerly Cyrus Gold, a Gotham City merchant murdered and thrown into Slaughter Swamp, where he was transformed into an undead, superstrong zombie-like creature, the wood in his body giving him resistance to Green Lanturn's ring. He stumbled into a hobo camp and remembered he was 'Born on a Monday', so was named Solomon Grundy by a hobo, and taken on a crime spree by them. He was apparently killed by a train, but later revived by an evil scientist's formula. Grundy was initially an enemy of the Golden Age Green Lantern and the Justice Society, but has both battled and aided various heroes during his multiple resurrections. He has absorbed some of Green Lantern's power due to confrontations with him. Later it is revealed that Cyrus committed suicide. |
"Made of Wood" Killer | Detective Comics #786 (November 2003) | Samuel Sullivan was an Irish immigrant in the early 20th century, instantly embracing the United States as the land of opportunity. He witnessed the Sportsmaster defeat Green Lantern with a wooden baseball bat, and lost all faith when Sportsmaster destroyed Sullivan's store. Sullivan was so devastated that he murdered the mayor (who had given Gothamites "false hopes") with the bat, carved "Made of Wood" into his chest, and placed his corpse in front of Alan Scott's statue that the mayor had erected for him. This was established as his modus operandi, the first in a long string of murders, which ended abruptly when Sullivan was committed to Arkham Asylum in December 1948. His son was an Irish mobster who was mocked by his fellow mobsters. When Seamus died, his only possession, a small chest of drawers, went to his grandson Francis Sullivan. Francis discovered his grandfather's notebook and took up the mantle of the "Made of Wood" Killer. He was defeated by Scott, along with Batman and Jim Gordon. |
Sportsmaster | All-American Comics #85 (May 1947) | Lawrence "Crusher" Crock was a former professional athlete who turned to a life of crime using various sports-themed paraphernalia. An enemy of the Golden Age Green Lantern, Sportsmaster later retired and married fellow villain the Tigress. |
Harlequin | All-American Comics #89 (September 1947) | Molly Mayne, secretary of Golden Age Green Lantern Alan Scott, developed a crush on the hero and sought to gain his attention as a costumed criminal. She used hallucinatory goggles provided by the Manhunters, but she was more likely to help Alan and the Justice Society than oppose them. She helped them when they had been given amnesia by the second ISW. Eventually reforming, Molly later married Alan and the two remain together to this day. |
Icicle | All-American Comics #90 (Oct. 1947) | Dr. Joar Mahkent, a scientist who created a powerful "ice-gun" capable of freezing the moisture in the air, was a foe of the Golden Age Green Lantern. He originally made it seem a gangster had killed him by killing him and altering his body, but his scheme was foiled by Green Lantern. He was slain by Krona during the Crisis on Infinite Earths and left half his fortune to Flash II. His son Cameron Mahkent, born a cryokinetic after exposure to his father's weapon, became the second Icicle. |
Red Lantern | The New Golden Age #1 (Nov. 2022) | In the pages of "The New Golden Age", Green Lantern had an enemy known as Red Lantern. Vladimir Sokov was a Russian soldier for the Soviet Union's Red Army who became their answer for Green Lantern after the Russian scientists managed to harness the powers of the Crimson Flame. As Green Lantern and Red Lantern have fought on occasions during the 1940s, they have worked together when Nazis threatened both their countries. |
Villain | First appearance | Description |
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Doctor Parris | Showcase #22 | A scientist with an ambition for power. Wanting to be the first to make usable H-Power, he sends a missile at a building where H-Power is being researched. Green Lantern stops it and starts questioning plane spotters to see if any saw the missile. He finds one came from a wood and discovers a camouflaged building. When he enters Parris tries to stop him using a battering ram, but Green Lantern turns it into a stream of water that he douses Parris with and takes the scientist to Army Headquarters, where he is sent to prison. |
Invisible Destroyer | Showcase #23 (November–December 1959) | Dr. Martin Phillips, a Coast City physicist, who found himself sketching a costumed figure without a face. Three days later, this figure came to life. Coast City newspapers dubbed the costumed criminal the Invisible Destroyer. He drew atomic energy to give him power and tried to set of an atom bomb to increase his power. Green Lantern was unable to directly stop the Destroyer as he was made of pure energy. He destroyed him using anti-energy particles, meaning that evil part of Martin's mind was now gone. A reimagined version of the Invisible Destroyer appears in the Green Lantern: The Animated Series spin-off comics, where he is portrayed as an old enemy of the Green Lantern Corps and has no implied Earthly origins. |
Saboteurs | Showcase #22 | The first foes Green Lantern fought, who used a radiation sender to try to make a plane crash. However Green Lantern stopped it crashing and defeated the Saboteurs. |
Puppeteer | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #1 (July–August 1960) | Jordan Weir was a scientist who created a "hypno-ray" which he could use to force his victims to obey his commands. As the Puppet Master, he embarked on a crime spree, manipulating minor criminals to do his dirty work for him. When Green Lantern interfered, Weir managed to take control of him as well, but was finally defeated. He was later, as the Puppeteer, a H.I.V.E. member and Teen Titans enemy. He has also used robot puppets. |
Weaponers of Qward | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #2 (September–October 1960) | Echoing the positive matter universe is the anti-matter universe of Qward. Legends tell of its origins as a dimension where evil is worshipped, though the world of Qward occupies the same relative position in the anti-matter universe as the world of Oa does in the positive matter universe. The Weaponers of Qward were formed by Yokal the Atrocious as the antithesis of the Oan Guardians of the Universe; they revel in only chaos and conquest. The Weaponers despise the Guardians' Green Lantern Corps and are determined to destroy them after discovering of them from Sinestro. They had weapons that used yellow energy due to the original ring's weakness. During the Crisis some were turned by the Anti-Monitor into Shadow Demons, whose deadly touch killed trillions. They were killed when the Anti-Monitor absorbed the entire anti-matter universe. |
Hector Hammond | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #5 (March–April 1961) | A powerful psychic criminal with a grotesque, enormous head. Hammond used a crashed meteor with unknown elements to firstly advance four kidnapped scientists minds, who he uses to create advanced technology which he claims are his own. Green Lantern stops him and restores the scientists. Hammond then advances his mind 100,000 years - giving him immense mental powers. Enemy of Hal Jordan, Hammond is obsessed with the Green Lantern and likes to live vicariously through his memories. After years of exposure to the meteor's radiation, Hammond is dependent on it for energy; without it he remains motionless due to the weight of his head, although he retains his formidable mental powers. |
Sinestro | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #7 (August 1961) | The archenemy of the Green Lantern, Hal Jordan. A former Green Lantern and mentor to Hal Jordan. When it was discovered that he had enslaved his home planet through fear, the Guardians exiled him to the planet Qward in the antimatter universe. He later returned, wielding a yellow, Qwardian power ring which was powered by fear. He was seemingly killed by Hal Jordan when he snaps his neck after the Oans tried to use him to defend their planet from Jordan's attack. Returns as a leader of Sinestro Corps. Later reinstated to the GLC before being taken by the Indigo Tribe. |
Zegors | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #8 | By the year 5700, Gila monsters, having retreated underground about the year 2000, causing humanity to think they are extinct, have developed a civilization and become much larger and stronger. They fire beams from their eyes which shrink people to sub-atomic size. Green Lantern is drawn to the year 5700 to fight the creatures. He discovers that an energy beam is giving the Zegors their eye beams and destroys the machine. He discovers that three Earthmen firing nuclear pistols at the same time can knock out a Zegor, and tells the Forces to operate in groups of three. The Zegors are defeated and the remnants are allowed to live in their half-destroyed underground city. Green Lantern is then sent back to the moment he was taken away. |
Ferenc Aldebaran | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #12 | A magician in the year 5702. Jealous at being overlooked for the post of Solar Director, he tries to take over the Solar System by hypnotizing three Generals at one of his performances. Green Lantern is brought to the year by the Solarians to defeat him, and after defeating the Generals and mind-probing them, he realises Aldebaran is responsible and goes after him. However, the villain has created a device which paralyzes Green Lantern, who animates a statue of himself that captures Aldebaran and destroys his machinery. Green Lantern is then sent back to the second he was taken to the Future and Aldebaran is presumably jailed. |
Spectrans | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #13 | Humanoid beings from the world Spectar, a planet in another dimension. Every four hours Spectar and Earth occupy the same space and travelling faster than light will enable travel between them. Green Lantern accidentally travels to the world and has his mind taken control of by the Spectran leaders. They succeed in making him capture the Flash, as they plan to discover the secret of his super-speed for purposes of conquest. They remove Green Lantern's memory of the event, but after talking to Pie-Face he realises he has forgotten the previous day. Using his ring he finds out what happened. He returns to Spectar where the Leaders have finished a formula to duplicate the speed of the Flash. Green Lantern releases the Flash and together they defeat the Spectrans and destroy the formula. It is then revealed the Spectran Drones don't want war; it was their Leaders who were the menace. After this, the two heroes return to Earth. |
Sonar | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #14 (July 1962) | Bito Wladon, Master of Sound and former ruler of Modora. He wanted Modora, a very small country which hardly anyone knows about, to be recognized, so he became a villain for that reason. An enemy of Hal Jordan, Wladon's son later became the third Sonar and battled Kyle Rayner with cybernetic implants. |
Star Sapphire | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #16 (October 1962) | Carol Ferris, Hal Jordan's girlfriend, unknowingly became one of his deadliest enemies. The Zamarons, a race of alien Amazon women, sought a new queen and chose Ferris due to an uncanny likeness to their last queen. With the Sapphire gem on her forehead Ferris was under the Zamarons' control. They touted female dominance, and so directed Ferris to kill the man she cherished most: Green Lantern. Ferris proved unable to do this, so for many years the gem kept her unaware of her Sapphire identity. The Zamarons later revealed they were the female counterparts to the Guardians of the Universe. Recently Ferris learned the Sapphire gem is a parasitic entity that has possessed women throughout the galaxy, especially those close to Green Lanterns. One example is Deborah Darnell, who was Star Sapphire in the 1970s, tormenting both Captain Comet and Green Lantern. Ferris revealed it was Jordan's brief affair with Darnell that drew the attention of the Sapphire to her, and the same fate has befallen his current love interest, Jillian "Cowgirl" Pearlman. Star Sapphire (Darnell, not Ferris) was killed by the Spectre in the Infinite Crisis miniseries. |
Doctor Polaris | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #21 (June 1962) | Dr. Neal Emerson, a scientist whose experiments granted him magnetic powers and unleashed a violent split personality (a "negative" to his normal "positive" persona). Enemy of both Hal Jordan and modern Green Lantern Kyle Rayner, Polaris was killed by the Human Bomb during the Infinite Crisis. |
Tattooed Man | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #23 (September 1963) | Abel Tarrant, a former Coast City sailor with a set of tattoos created from mysterious chemicals. The Tattooed Man was able to animate these designs and unleash them upon his enemies. He was apparently killed by the Mirror Master and Jewelee during a Suicide Squad mission. |
Protonic Force | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #24 (September 1963) | A bodiless sentient, the being known only as the Protonic Force existed by inhabiting forms of matter. It could survive outside of matter only for short periods of time. So it was that the Protonic Force came to inhabit a fireball inside a sentient planet (Uugo). It continued to grow inside the planet's core, where the sentient planet could not reach it, and periodically sent out powerful forces which threatened to disrupt the planet completely. The Protonic Force did not communicate with the sentient planet and was unconcerned that its power threatened the planet's existence. |
Shark | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #24 (October 1963) | Has used the names T. S. Smith and Karshon; a tiger shark mutated by nuclear waste into a humanoid monstrosity. Despite his heightened intelligence, he is still motivated by his bloodthirsty instincts. |
Myrwhydden | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #26 (December 1963) | Myrwhydden was an alien magician who ruled the weird world within Green Lantern's power ring. The mage often drew Green Lantern into the ring to terrorize him. |
Black Hand | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #29 (June 1964) | William Hand, a criminal inventor whose greatest creation was a device that drained power from Green Lantern rings. After losing his hand to the Specture, Black Hand has since gone mad and had his powers increased, allowing him to absorb human lifeforces. Finally, he became a major villain in the Blackest Night storyline after being resurrected and used the skull of a Batman clone to produce Black Lantern rings. |
Headmen | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #36 (April 1965) | The Headmen were the sinister rulers of Garon. They utilized a Cerebro-ray to mentally enslave their entire planet. One woman, Onu Murtu, was unaffected by its rays and escaped to Earth. She sought out Hal Jordan, hoping that Jordan could contact Green Lantern - not knowing they were one and the same. Green Lantern helped fend off the Headmen, whereupon Onu elected to return to Garon undercover, to build a rebellion. She left Green Lantern a note for Hal Jordan, stating that while she had fallen in love with him, she had to return home. Later, Green Lantern visited Garon and helped Onu liberate her people from the Headmen once and for all. |
Evil Star | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #37 (June 1965) | Twisted scientist of the planet Auron whose immortality experiments killed all life on his home world, Evil Star possesses the powerful "Starband", which draws power from the stars themselves, and a legion of minion creatures called Starlings. |
Goldface | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #38 (July 1965) | Keith Kenyon, a criminal whose skin was turned to gold by an elixir of his own devising. Goldface later reformed and became an honest union commissioner in Central City. |
Brutus Force | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #39 (May 1965) | Touring the Milky Way Galaxy, Bru Tusfors had fought every planetary champion and won. He always obeyed the local rules, and always fought bare-handed against any opponent with any manner of weaponry. On the world of Uxor, Bru Tusfors defeated their champion and, as always, was told of another "unbeatable" foe. On Uxor they regarded the Green Lantern of Earth as the most formidable foe. |
Krona | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #40 (October 1965) | A renegade Oan scientist, Krona defied his brother Guardians by peering back to the beginning of time, an act which created the Multiverse and led indirectly to the Crisis on Infinite Earths. This caused the Guardians to try protecting the universe. He was exiled from his world, but has made several attacks on the universe after making an alliance with the demon Neron, and was the villain in JLA/Avengers , which ended with him becoming a cosmic egg that would eventually hatch a new universe. He later attacked Oa, infecting the Guardians with one of the Emotional Entities which placed them in his thrall. He was then killed by Hal Jordan using a Green Power Ring, an act that should have been impossible to do due to implanted fail-safes in the ring that the Guardians placed there to prevent the Rings from being turned against them. Krona's body was taken by Red Lantern leader Atrocitus. |
Major Disaster | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #43 (March 1966) | Paul Booker, a crook with an invention that created earthquakes, shock waves, and natural disasters. He later bargained his soul to the demon Neron for probability-altering powers. However, Booker came to regret this lifestyle and reformed, becoming a member of the Justice League. He was killed by Superboy-Prime during the "Infinite Crisis". |
Controllers | Adventure Comics #357 (June 1967) | An offshoot of the Guardians of the Universe with a more proactive approach, the Controllers seek to pre-emptively eliminate threats to the universe, rather than react to them. To this end, they have employed the Darkstar Corps and created pawns such as the villainous Effigy. |
Lamplighter | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #60 (April 1968) | Doctor Lee Carver was a nuclear researcher seeking a way of altering the molecular structure of matter. He worked on a way to stabilize the transmutation. Tragedy struck when his experiment blew up in his face. Carver lived, but he was blinded. The combination of chemicals and the high frequency waves he was bombarding them with resulted in a new kind of light. The chemicals somehow affected his damaged optic nerves, permitting a more intense light to reach them, allowing the once-blind man to see. |
Manhunters | 1st Issue Special #5 (August 1975) | A race of robots, designed by the Guardians of the Universe, as a first attempt at an interstellar police force. Over time, they began to like hunting targets more than seeking justice. They rebelled against the Guardians and were defeated. The remaining Manhunters hid throughout the galaxy. Their mission is to destroy the Guardians and their replacements, the Green Lantern Corps. |
Professor Ojo | Richard Dragon, Kung Fu Fighter #18 (May 1977) | The son of an assistant in an early atomic energy facility, whose poor safety standards exposed workers to massive doses of hard radiation, Ojo was born without eyes. Brilliant but blind, Ojo eventually created a device allowing him to see, and eventually became associated with the League of Assassins. |
Nekron | Tales of the Green Lantern Corps #1 (May 1981) | The ruler of a dimension known as the Lord of the Unliving. He became the ruler, and if he was ever alive is not known. Though Nekron was not death herself, Nekron's realm contained the souls of all who had died, passing through his domain on the way to their final destination. |
Yellow Peril | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #107 (August 1978) | A skyjacking gang, the Yellow Peril thought taking over Coast City Airport would be easy. Knowing Coast City's resident protector, Green Lantern had no power over the color yellow, the armed thugs dressed themselves from head-to-toe in yellow costumes. |
Replikon | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #108 (September 1978) | Xum (Andre in human form) is a sentient shapeshifting alien that can mimic the appearance and abilities of others, most often the Justice League of America. Replikon lived on a planet between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter until it broke apart, destroying his entire race. He came to Earth to radically alter its atmosphere to make it suitable for his offspring. |
Crumbler | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #114 (March 1979) | Alexander Percy Tuttle was bright and had a particular talent for science. His father, businessman Morris Tuttle, was only interested in making money and threatened his son if he "wasted his time" with scientific concerns. The younger Tuttle had used the father's company's fund for a vacation village project to develop a glove that operated from the energy from his central nervous system. With his mechanical glove, the Crumbler could cancel the force that binds atoms together. |
Anti-Green Lantern Corps | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #150 (March 1982) | Developed as a fighting force that rivaled the Green Lantern Corps, the Weaponers of Qward tapped into the Black Light and produced their own power rings. Unfortunately, the willpower necessary to use the rings required its bearers to have augmented brains, so that when the rings lost their charge after 24 hours, the bearers lost their lives. |
Villain | First appearance | Description | |
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Javelin | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #173 (February 1984) | The Javelin's true identity has never been revealed, but it is known that he is a former German Olympic athlete who turned to a life of crime, using his uncanny abilities with a javelin-based weapons arsenal. | |
Demolition Team | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #176 (May 1984) | A team of supervillains who is hired by Congressman Jason Bloch to destroy the Los Angeles branch of Ferris Aircraft. The Ferris employees were virtually defenseless against the team and their state-of-the-art weaponry provided by the Monitor. | |
Bolphunga the Unrelenting | Green Lantern (vol. 2) #188 (May 1985) | An alien who fought against Mogo and Guy Gardner. | |
Anti-Monitor | Crisis on Infinite Earths #6 (September 1985) | The force behind Crisis on Infinite Earths, the Anti-Monitor watched over the Anti-Matter Universe as the Monitor did with the Multiverse created when Krona broke the taboo of watching the universe's creation. It would try to conquer the Multiverse, but meet defeat and return due to the efforts of Alexander Luthor, Jr. during Infinite Crisis and later become the Guardian of the Sinestro Corps and fuel for the Black Central Power Battery. | |
Ranx the Sentient City | Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Annual #2 (1986) | A city prophesied to destroy Mogo and introduced in current continuity in Green Lantern Corps #5 (Dec 2006). | |
Major Force | Captain Atom (vol. 3) #12 (February 1988) | Clifford Zmeck was transformed into a quantum-powered super-soldier in an experiment similar to that which created Captain Atom. Major Force is a brutal murderer responsible for the death of Kyle Rayner's girlfriend, Alex DeWitt. | |
Legion | Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn #2 (January 1990) | After Green Lantern Corps conquering planet Tchk-Tchk, they began to spread to the rest of the galaxy, at which point the Guardians of the Universe decided to take action, sending the Green Lanterns to beat back the Tchk-Tchk and seal off their planet. Tchk-Tchk quickly expended their food supply and began to die out. Realizing what was happening, they put their minds into their new invention, the Soul Jar, wherein they became a sort of hive mind. Once all the remaining minds had entered, they built themselves a new body and called themselves Legion. | |
Tattooed Man II | Skin Graft: The Adventures of a Tattooed Man #1 (July 1993) | John Oakes, a former cellmate of Abel Tarrant who learned the art of mystical skin grafting, allowing him to open gateways and absorb people into the tattoos on his body. | |
Parallax | Green Lantern (vol. 3) #50 (March 1994) | A fear-inducing demon who once merged with Hal Jordan when he entered the power battery of Oa. | |
Ohm | Green Lantern (vol. 3) #51 (May 1994) | There is little information regarding the supervillain called Ohm. He stole an experimental suit of armor from S.T.A.R. Labs and threatened to destroy Los Angeles. | |
Duality | Green Lantern vol. 3 #62 (May 1995) | Created by the last Guardian, Ganthet, Duality was a simple energy construct designed to retrieve Kyle Rayner. He is a melding of two warriors; the left half is a sword-wielding alien humanoid, the right half is a mechanized being armed with an energy blaster. Duality confronted Rayner to test the neophyte Green Lantern's skills in wielding the ring. | |
Purgatory | Green Lantern (vol. 3) #66 (September 1995) | Paul Christian lost his legs in a subway accident, but little did he know his troubles were just beginning. He had the misfortune of being outside the New York Public Library during a fight between Green Lantern and an attacker in high tech battle armor. After the battle, Kyle Rayner figured out a way to give Paul some of his power permanently in order to create construct legs for himself. Later on, Neron offered to augment Christian's power, giving him greater control and restoring his legs. He was hesitant at first, but he eventually agreed to Neron's deal and returned to confront Kyle as an enemy. | |
Grayven | Green Lantern (vol. 3) #74 (June 1996) | Illegitimate son of Darkseid, Grayven seeks to one day usurp his father's throne. He is an enemy of Green Lantern Kyle Rayner. | |
Fatality | Green Lantern (vol. 3) #83 (February 1997) | Yrra Cynril, last survivor of the planet Xanshi, which Green Lantern John Stewart failed to save in a moment of arrogance. Since then, Cynril trained with the Warlords of Okaara in order to wage a vendetta against all Green Lanterns. She harbored special hatred for John Stewart and Kyle Rayner. Recently, she's become a member of the Star Sapphires after they turned her hatred into love for John. | |
Effigy | Green Lantern (vol. 3) #110 (March 1999) | Martyn Van Wyck was once an aimless drifter until he was abducted by the Controllers and turned into a super-powered being capable of manipulating fire. Rebelling against his masters, Effigy became an enemy of Green Lantern Kyle Rayner. | |
Traitor | Legends of the DC Universe #20 (September 1999) | Devlos Ungol was merged with an armor that could adapt to any weapon thrown at it. He then crushed his people, who died calling him Traitor. As he travelled, he fought the Green Lantern Starkaor who damaged Traitor's armor, but Starkaor was injured too, appointing Abin Sur as his successor. Traitor joined the criminal Bloody Joe Tuscano until he could replenish his powers. [1] Eventually, Sur arrived, and alongside Marshall Henry Lee Jordan, defeated Joe and Traitor, destroying Joe's weapons and imprisoning Traitor in a pocket dimension in the ring. [2] Almost a century later, after developing a means of exerting control over the ring, Traitor lured the Atom to use the white dwarf star fragment that gave the Atom his powers to provide himself with energy. [3] As a result, Traitor was able to exchange Earth for the pocket world, intending to destroy each other when Earth expanded back to its normal size. As Hal Jordan and Traitor clashed, the Atom used a ring to slow the rate of Earth's growth, and thus allowing Earth to be restored safely. The destruction of his equipment sent Traitor to the Sun, which blocked him from the dead star energy that he needed to survive. [4] Eventually, however, Traitor escaped, managing to gain enough energy to flee when the Sun briefly went out during the Final Night crisis. [5] Traitor destroyed the entire world of Ramnos, also gaining an unwilling ally, Stellera. Traitor sent Stellera to Earth, ordering her to claim that she sought the aid of Green Lantern to defeat Traitor. Eventually finding the current Green Lantern, Kyle Rayner, Stellera returned to Ramnos, where Traitor crushed Kyle's ring and left him for dead. [6] However, Kyle realised that his ring retained power, and used this to piece it back together through sheer will. The two of them clashed in an asteroid field, during which Kyle used the ring to create 'ghosts' of the Green Lanterns who had defeated Traitor in the past. Traitor revealed that he had only drawn Kyle to perfect himself; of all he'd fought, only Green Lanterns had been able to find the flaws in Traitor's armor, but now those flaws no longer existed. Aided by Stellera distracting Traitor, Kyle launched shutted Traitor's armor down. As Stellera died, her DNA killing her due to her defiance of Traitor- her last act being to heal Kyle-, Kyle imprisoned Traitor at Ramnos, where no dead star radiation could reach him. [7] Traitor was last seen in a possible future killing Hal Jordan. This was shown to Superman and the Daily Planet staff by Arion in the Camelot Falls storyline. Traitor was apparently an "old foe resurrected". [8] Whether this has any bearing on the present of Traitor is unknown given the ambiguous nature of the future shown (Arion was convinced that it was real but the Phantom Stranger later assured Superman that it was still just one of many potential futures even if it was a likely one). [9] | |
Nero | Green Lantern (vol. 3) #132 (January 2001) | Alex Nero, a disturbed mental patient with highly developed artistic skills. Nero was given a yellow power ring by the Weaponers of Qward, similar to that of Sinestro, and became a dark opposite of Green Lantern Kyle Rayner. | |
Amon Sur | Green Lantern (vol. 3) #162 (June 2003) | The son of Abin Sur. Driven by his jealousy of Hal Jordan, whom his father had given his Green Lantern power ring, instead of to his son, Amon became a powerful interstellar criminal, and for a time, was the leader of the Black Circle Syndicate. Became a member of the Sinestro Corps, but was soon killed by Laira. | |
Tattooed Man III | Green Lantern (vol. 4) #9 (April 2006) | Mark Richards, a former US Marine turned hitman who tattoos the sins of his victims onto their bodies. | |
Ragnar | Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #1 (August 2006) | Ragnar, a prince of Betrassus in Space Sector 1417. He did not have his eyes on ascending his world's throne; rather, his focus was on the star-spanning Green Lantern Corps. With the wealth and power at Ragnar's command, it would come as no surprise that he had amassed quite a collection of items related to the Green Lantern Corps, but Ragnar's interest did not end with the mere accumulation of memorabilia. | |
Sinestro Corps | Green Lantern (vol. 4) #10 (May 2006) | After Hal Jordan's resurrection and the reorganization of the Green Lantern Corps, Sinestro organized his own corps, with himself as their leader. Members wield a yellow power ring, like Sinestro's, and must be able to invoke fear in their enemies. | |
Arkillo | Green Lantern (vol. 4) #10 (May 2006) | Drill sergeant of the Sinestro Corps, the monstrous Arkillo consumes the weaker recruits of his organization. | |
Tarra Karn | Ion #1 (June 2006) | Formerly with the Thanagarian Navy, Tarra Karn has since turned to a career in bounty hunting. At this time, her most notable quarry was Green Lantern Kyle Rayner, known as Ion. | |
Loragg | Green Lantern (vol. 4) #12 (July 2006) | Loragg was the aide to Amon Sur, formerly the magnate commander of the Black Circle Crime Syndicate. It is not known if Loragg had been a member of the Black Circle, as Amon Sur killed thousands of members in the Black Circle as well as their families as vengeance for expelling him. | |
Despotellis | Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #10 (May 2007) | A sentient virus and member of the Sinestro Corps, Despotellis is responsible for the death of Kyle Rayner's mother, Maura, as part of Sinestro's revenge against the Green Lantern. | |
Bedovian | Green Lantern Corps (vol. 2) #20 (July 2007) | The resident sharpshooter and sniper of the Sinestro Corps, a hermit crab-like creature who lies in wait for his victims within his shell. | |
Lyssa Drak | Green Lantern (vol. 4) #18 (May 2007) | Member of the Sinestro Corps and keeper of the Book of Parallax, that organization's most cherished text. | |
Karu-Sil | Green Lantern (vol. 4) #19 (May 2007) | Member of the Sinestro Corps, Karu-Sil is a feral alien who was raised by a pack of wolf-like creatures on her home world. After their deaths and her recruitment to the Corps, she used her power ring to create copies of her pack. | |
Kryb | Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special #1 (June 2007) | Member of the Sinestro Corps, a monster that murdered parents and stole their infant children for reasons as yet unknown. A cage-like sac would open on her back to hold the many infants she had stolen. | |
Tri-Eye | Green Lantern: Sinestro Corps Special #1 (June 2007) | Member of the Sinestro Corps, a carnivorous predator that lives at the bottom of waterwells where it springs up and captures its prey when it comes to for a drink. Its three mouths leave no trace behind as Tri-Eye tears through meat and bone. As prey would eventually learn to fear a waterwell that harbored a dangerous predator, Tri-Eye changes feeding areas by traveling across its home planet by a system of tunnels. | |
Atrocitus | Green Lantern (vol. 4) #29 (May 2008) | After Krona ordered the Manhunters to massacre his sector, he became obsessed with revenge. He murdered Abin Sur. He is currently the leader of the Red Lantern Corps. | |
Red Lantern Corps | Final Crisis: Rage of the Red Lanterns #1 (October 2008) | Shortly after the Sinestro Corps War, the Red Lanterns organize themselves on the planet Ysmault. Members of the Corps are driven by great rage. Instead of a power battery, the Red Lanterns recharge their rings with the blood of their victims. They are currently led by Atrocitus. | |
Orange Lantern Corps | Green Lantern #39 (April 2009) | The Orange Lantern Corps (Avarice) is made up of only one member, Larfleeze, who goes by the name of Agent Orange. All other members of the corps are in fact constructs created by him as he is too jealously possessive to share the lantern's power. All the construct-members appear as beings who have been chosen by the lantern in the past (but failed to survive Agent Orange's greed) encased in an orange glow similar to Green Lantern ring constructs. | |
Agent Orange (Larfleeze) | Green Lantern #39 (April 2009) | In the Vega System on the planet Okaara lives Larfleeze, a being so filled with greed that it has consumed his entire being. He now lives in a cave isolated for centuries after an ancient pact with the Guardians of the Universe let him live with the Orange Light undisturbed. The Controllers try to take his power and he kills them; thinking his deal has been revoked, he sends a message to the Guardians, warning them to leave him alone. | |
Keepers | Green Lantern Corps (vol. 3) #1 | The Keepers was the name given to a race of humanoid beings that inhabited the planet Urak. These skeletal beings' native world was a barren world where their race struggled to exist. Their existence changed when their homeworld was visited by the Guardians of the Universe who were seeking a place that would serve as a storage ground for the Green Lantern Power Batteries. This came after it became apparent that members of the Green Lantern Corps began to suffer when their Power Rings ran out of charge. Thus, the Oans sought out a means of addressing this issue by providing easy access between a Green Lantern and their Power Rings. They learnt that the unique properties of Urak allowed for a temporal conduit between a Power Battery and Power Ring whereupon they made a pact with the native species. In exchange for rebuilding their world, the race would act as protectors and custodians of the Power Batteries that were stored in the Emerald Plains. Thus, the native inhabitants of Urak became known as the Keepers due to their new role. The unique composition of their homeworld led to the Power Batteries growing as if they were crops within the Emerald Fields. Though they held an important role in the Green Lantern Corps, their existence was not known to the Green Lanterns with even their Power Rings unable to identify the species. These conditions, however, led to a form of symbiosis as the Power Batteries provided energy that nourished Urak and fed its people. The energy of Willpower was thus infused into the singular DNA of the Keepers and provided them an amazingly potent force of will. As a result, they became beings that possessed an innate reserve of willpower which was overwhelming and not in proportion with their relatively common forms. This trait made their armor completely immune to the effects of Lantern Energy Construct that derived from Willpower in the Emotional Spectrum. Their strength of will made them capable of actually willing their own bodies to shut down and kill themselves. The lush homeworld allowed their race to prosper as shepherds in this role. Events changed for the race in 2012 when the Oans arrived on Urak and removed all the Power Batteries from the Keepers care who they referred to as undeserving parasites. This act led to Urak returning to its formerly barren existence with the Keepers struggling to simply survive, so they begin to attack another planets in order to steal their resources. | |
Relic | Green Lantern (vol. 5) #21 | Long before the Guardians of Oa or the universe itself, the Lightsmiths discovered how to harness the energy of the universe. In their time, the violet light was passion, the red fury, the orange gluttony, the green resolve, the indigo empathy, the blue light faith and the yellow light terror. Each of the Lightsmiths created entire worlds of just pure light. Occasionally, they would war with each other, but for the most part they lived in harmony. One of them however was cautious in using the light arguing it could be exhausted. Laughing at this notion the others dubbed him "Relic", the scientist then tried to prove his claim by discovering the light's source but failed. He returns to his world after a long absence to find the light dying. Terrified of losing her, the Lightsmiths go to war, one that rages until the last of the light, the green light of resolve, dies. When all the light is gone, the universe collapses and Relic is broken apart at a molecular level. When Relic is reborn, he returns in a new form, one locked in a space anomaly. Brought back as a giant being into the new universe when he senses more Lightsmiths and escapes to stop them, knowing they only respond to violence he will use that to save the universe. [10] |
DC Comics, Inc. is an American comic book publisher and the flagship unit of DC Entertainment, a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery.
The DC Universe (DCU) is the shared universe in which most stories in American comic book titles published by DC Comics take place. In context, the term "DC Universe" usually refers to the main DC continuity. It contains such well-known superheroes as Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, the Flash, Green Lantern, Aquaman, Green Arrow, Captain Marvel, Martian Manhunter, and Cyborg; as well as teams such as the Justice League, the Justice Society of America, the Suicide Squad, Doom Patrol, and the Teen Titans. It also contains well-known supervillains, including the Joker, Lex Luthor, the Cheetah, the Reverse-Flash, Sinestro, Black Manta, Deathstroke, Black Adam, Brainiac, and Darkseid.
This is a list of DC Multiverse fictional characters which were created for and are owned by DC Comics.
Vandar Adg of the Blood Tribe, more widely known as Vandal Savage, is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He is said to be a Cro-Magnon warrior who gained immortality and advanced healing abilities after encountering a strange meteorite during prehistoric times. For over 50,000 years, he plagues the Earth as a villain and occasional conqueror, sometimes using different names but most often calling himself Vandal Savage. He is a brilliant and sadistic tactician with immense knowledge in various sciences and forms of combat, able to fight effectively despite not having any superhuman powers beyond his ability to survive and heal from lethal wounds. Throughout history, his most frequent enemies are immortal or reincarnating heroes such as Immortal Man, Hawkman, Hawkgirl, and Resurrection Man. He is also a recurring foe of the Justice Society and the Justice League and occasionally works as a member of super-villain organizations such as the Injustice Society and the Legion of Doom.
General Zod is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, commonly as an adversary of the superhero Superman. The character, who first appeared in Adventure Comics #283, was created by Robert Bernstein and initially designed by George Papp. As a Kryptonian, he exhibits the same powers and abilities as Superman and is consequently viewed as one of his greatest enemies alongside Lex Luthor, Darkseid and Brainiac. He is also well known for his famous catchphrase, "Kneel before Zod!".
Ultra-Humanite is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He first appeared as a recurring adversary of Superman, and was among the first villains faced by him. He was designed to be the polar opposite of Superman; while Superman is a hero with superhuman strength, Ultra-Humanite is a criminal mastermind who has a crippled body but a highly advanced intellect. The Ultra-Humanite served as Superman's nemesis until Alexei Luthor and his Silver Age counterpart Lex Luthor were introduced in the comics. The origins of the super-criminal known as the Ultra-Humanite are shrouded in mystery. Even he claims not to remember his true name or appearance and attributes his vast intellect and mental prowess to scientific experiments of an unknown nature.
Blaze and Satanus are twin fictional demonic siblings appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Blaze first debuted in Action Comics #655, created by Roger Stern and Brett Breeding and first pencilled by Bob McLeod. Later, Satanus was created by Brett Breeding and debuted in The Adventures of Superman #493 by Jerry Ordway and Tom Grummett. The twin duo originally starred as Superman villains associated with the supernatural but were later revealed to be the children of the Wizard Shazam, Blaze respectively depicted as a powerful enemy of the Marvel Family.
Perry White is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. He is the editor-in-chief of the Metropolis newspaper the Daily Planet. The character maintains very high ethical and journalistic standards and is an archetypal image of the tough, irascible, but fair-minded boss.
Solaris is a DC Comics supervillain who exists in the distant future of the DC Universe. Solaris was created by Grant Morrison, and first appeared in the DC One Million crossover, although it also subsequently appeared in Grant Morrison's All-Star Superman series, set outside DC continuity.
"Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?" is a 1986 American comic book story published by DC Comics, featuring the superhero Superman. Written by British author Alan Moore with help from long-time Superman editor Julius Schwartz, the story was published in two parts, beginning in Superman #423 and ending in Action Comics #583, both published in September 1986. The story was drawn by long-time artist Curt Swan in one of his final major contributions to the Superman titles and was inked by George Pérez in the issue of Superman and Kurt Schaffenberger in the issue of Action Comics. The story was an imaginary story which told the final tale of the Silver Age Superman and his long history, which was being rebooted following the events of Crisis on Infinite Earths, before his modern introduction in the John Byrne series, The Man of Steel.
Samuel Emerson "Slam" Bradley is a fictional character that has appeared in various comic book series published by DC Comics. He is a private detective who exists in DC's main shared universe. The character concept was created by DC Comics founder Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson and developed by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, who both later became more well known as the co-creators of Superman. As one of the first ever DC characters, the character first appears in the Golden Age of Comic Books in the anthology title Detective Comics, being introduced in the first issue. He later commonly was associated with Batman and other spinoff Batman characters when revived.
Livewire is a supervillainess appearing in multimedia produced by DC Entertainment, and American comic books published by DC Comics. Created for Superman: The Animated Series, the character appeared in March 1997 in Superman Adventures #5. Her first mainstream comic book appearance was in DC Comics' Action Comics #835.
While Batman and Superman had their own animated series and comic book follow-ups, the rest of the characters in the DC Comics Universe appeared in the following comics often.
DC Universe Presents is the name of two DC Comics publications. The first was part of the UK 'Collector's Edition' line of DC Comics published by Titan Magazines. Beginning March 2007, it was originally titled Superman Legends and was published alongside Batman Legends. Titan also later released several other DC comics following on from the success of Superman and Batman Legends. The book was retitled as DC Universe Presents at issue 33 but continued the issue count of Superman Legends, despite the change in title and in some of its content. The title reprinted DC Comics from the United States including Justice League, Superman and Green Lantern and was edited by Mark McKenzie-Ray.
Cyborg Superman is a persona that has been used by two supervillains who appear in comic books published by DC Comics.
DC Universe Presents Batman Superman was part of the 'Collector's Edition' line of DC Comics anthologies published monthly in the UK by Titan Magazines from September 2007 to March 2008. It reprinted DC Comics titles from the United States featuring Batman, Superman and related characters from the DC Universe and accompanied Batman Legends, Justice League Legends and Superman Legends as the fourth DC Collectors' Edition published by Titan.
Atlas is a superhero and antihero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. It debuted in 1st Issue Special #1 and was created by Jack Kirby.